Sunday Times

Here’s what they didn’t tell us about finances

- STEPHAN HOFSTATTER

THE SABC presented a rosetinted picture of its financial health when it released its audited results this week, but the first five months of the current financial year show that the broadcaste­r is haemorrhag­ing cash at an alarming rate.

Acting CEO James Aguma and corporate affairs executive Hlaudi Motsoeneng downplayed a R411-million loss for the financial year that ended on March 31.

They blamed the loss on the global economic downturn, increasing pension costs and the burden of delivering a public service broadcasti­ng mandate with scant government support.

Aguma also claimed that having R881-million in the bank in March and net assets of R2.7billion meant going insolvent was out of the question.

What he didn’t say, however, is that matters have deteriorat­ed dramatical­ly in the five months since March.

The Sunday Times has obtained a raft of confidenti­al financial documents, including an SABC treasury risk committee report for July, an income statement for August and an auditorgen­eral’s report dated August 15, which lay bare the extent of the SABC’s financial crisis.

Here’s what the SABC doesn’t want the public and parliament to know:

In the past five months, the SABC has lost a further R496millio­n. This is more than the total loss for the entire 2015-16 financial year;

At the end of July, the SABC only had R245-million in the bank, despite its treasury warning that it “must have a cash balance of +-R650-million at all times to continue operations”;

It’s understood that, by last week, cash reserves had dwindled to R200-million, which means that the SABC has burnt through more than R600-million in cash in five months;

Audience ratings show the SABC’s share has declined from 49.3% in March to 47.4% in August against a target of 52%. Over the same period, e.tv and DStv both grew their audience share; and

TV licence fee collection rates continue to decline.

This is in addition to a R5billion hole the auditor-general found in the SABC’s books.

The auditor-general lambasted the SABC for failing to hold anyone to account for this irregular expenditur­e.

Sources said the SABC was hiding an even worse cash balance by counting about R100millio­n in forward payments from MultiChoic­e.

Motsoeneng’s “un-researched and ill-considered” decision to impose a 90% local content quota “has impacted [on] the SABC’s performanc­e”, said one source.

In response to questions about this, SABC spokesman Kaizer Kganyago said that during the results presentati­on Aguma had “made it clear that the SABC is not insolvent”.

 ??  ?? ‘FIGURATIVE’: Acting CEO James Aguma faces a grilling over the true state of the SABC’s financial health
‘FIGURATIVE’: Acting CEO James Aguma faces a grilling over the true state of the SABC’s financial health

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